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C_THR88_2205 - SAP Certified Application Associate - SAP SuccessFactors Learning Management C_THR88_2205 - SAP Certified Application Associate - SAP SuccessFactors Learning Management

C_THR88_2205 - SAP Certified Application Associate - SAP SuccessFactors Learning Management - PDF document

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C_THR88_2205 - SAP Certified Application Associate - SAP SuccessFactors Learning Management - PPT Presentation

CTHR882205 SAP Certified Application Associate SAP SuccessFactors Learning Management 1H2022 ID: 969886

C_THR88_2205 - SAP Certified Application Associate - SAP SuccessFactors Learning Management 1H/2022

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Certified With SAP Certified Application Associate - SAP SuccessFactors Learning Management 1H/2022 Dumps Certification Get your required dump now: https://certsgot.com/product/dumps - c_thr88_2205 - sap - certified - application - associate - sap - successfactors - learning - management - 1h - 2022/ Copy Paste The Above URL To Get The Dump Related Information In this video, we want to consider “virtual LANs,” or for short. Consider this layer to be switched on Those 48 ports on the front are, by default, all part of the same broadcast domain. A broadcast sent to one port is going to show up on all the other por ts because they belong to the same subnet or broadcast domain. Or we could say the same VLAN. Many of our layer 2 switches will have all of their ports assigned to VLAN 1 by default. However, we might have different departments connecting to the very same switch. We might want them to belong to different subnets, or, in other words, different broadcast domains. Maybe we have a sales department and an engineering department. We don’t want them to see each other’s printers by sending broadcasts. So what we mi ght do is carve out maybe twelve ports and dedicate those for sales. We’ll say that the sales is going to be numbered 10, and it represents the subnets of 170, 216, and 100:24. Maybe we have another twelve ports dedicated for engineering users, and we’ll s ay it’s numbered 20, and the subnet for 20 is 192, 168. Let’s say we have a couple of computers. The computer on the bottom left belongs to sales, and the other computer on the right belongs to engineering. and they’re going to connect into their respectiv e VLAN ports. And at this point, these two computers are isolated from one another. They cannot communicate with one another because, even though they’re plugged into the same switch, they belong to different VLANs and different broadcast domains. In other words, different subnets. How do you get from one subnet to another subnet? You have to route. So if I want to go from one laptop to another, I’ve got to add a router into the mix. And I can connect the router to that switch using a special connection cal led a trunk connection. and a trunk, and this is good for your notes. A trunk has the unique ability to carry traffic for multiple VLANs. As a result, that switch’s trunk port can send traffic to the router for VLANs 10 and 20. And the default and any addi tional we add can all flow over that trunk and router port into which we’re connecting. You might wonder to what subnet it belongs. It could belong to all the subnets. Here’s the deal: We take that physical interface, and we can configure a bunch of sub in terfaces on that physical interface.